Malcolm McDowell
Malcolm McDowell was born in Horsforth, England, United Kingdom on June 13th, 1943 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 81, Malcolm McDowell biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, TV shows, and networth are available.
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Malcolm McDowell (born Malcolm John Taylor; 13 June 1943) is an English actor known for his boisterous and often villainous roles.
He studied at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art as an actor. McDowell has appeared in a number of film roles as a character actor over the course of his career.
Alex DeLarge in Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange (1971), the title character in Tinto Brass's Caligula (1979), and Mick Travis in Lindsay Anderson's trilogy of if... (1968) O Lucky Man! (1973) and Britannia Hospital (1982).
He has appeared in films such as Time After Time (1979), Cat People (1982), Star Trek Generations (1994), Tank Girl (1995), Easy A (2010), and The Artist (2011).
He also appeared as Dr. X.
Samuel Loomis appeared in Halloween and its 2009 sequel, Halloween II.
In the forthcoming Bombshell (2019), Rupert Murdoch will be seen. McDowell has appeared in numerous television series including Entourage (2006–2007), Heroes (2006–2011), The Mentalist (2010–2013), and Mozart in the Jungle (2014–2022).
He narrated the documentary The Compleat Beatles (1982) and in recent years, he has been a prolific voice actor in films, television series, and video games such as Metalocalypse (2007–2012), God of War III (2011) and The Elder Scrolls Online (2015).
In 2012, he was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame as a celebrity.
Early life
Malcolm John Taylor was born in Horsforth, West Riding of Yorkshire, on June 13, the son of hotelier Edna (née McDowell) and RAF officer (and later pub owner) Charles Taylor. Gloria, his older sister, and Judy, his younger sister. Gloria later had a son, actor Alexander Siddig, with whom McDowell would appear in the film Doomsday (2008). The family migrated to Bridlington, East Riding of Yorkshire, where McDowell's father was stationed at the nearby RAF Carnaby. McDowell grew up and as a teenager, they served in a Planters nut factory in nearby Aintree, as well as working at his father's pub in Burscough, Lancashire. When he was in school, he began taking acting lessons before moving to London in order to study as an actor at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA).
Personal life
In March 1969, McDowell met actress and publicist Margot Bennett, who married from 1975 to 1980. He met actress Mary Steenburgen in 1978 while filming Time After Time, and they married in September 1980. Lilly (born 22 January 1981) and filmmaker Charlie McDowell (born 10 July 1983), before divorcing in 1990. In 1991, Kelley Kuhr, 24 years his junior, married him. Beckett McDowell (born 18 January 2004), Finnian (born 23 December 2006), and Seamus (born 7 January 2009) reside in Ojai, California, and have three sons together: Beckett McDowell (born 18 January 2004), Finnian (born 19 December 2006), and Seamus (born 7 January 2009).
McDowell became a fan of Liverpool FC as an infant, spending the majority of his childhood at Anfield, and continues to support the team.
Career
McDowell began working as an extra with the Royal Shakespeare Company for the first time. If... (1968) by British filmmaker Lindsay Anderson, he made his film debut as a school rebel Mick Travis in If... (1968). The BFI named if.... the 12th best British film of the twentieth century, a landmark of British countercultural cinema. McDowell's next films were Figures in a Landscape (1970) and The Raging Moon (1971). Stanley Kubrick, who starred McDowell in A Clockwork Orange (1971), a film by Anthony Burgess, captured his interest in if. He received acclaim for his role as Alex DeLarge, a young sadist who suffers brainwashing by the British government in a near-sighted future. He was nominated for a Golden Globe, a National Society of Film Critics Award, and the Best Actor award from the New York Film Critics Circle.
He worked with Anderson again on O Lucky Man! (1973), also wrote about (1973), which was inspired by McDowell's time as a coffee salesman and Britannia Hospital (1982). McDowell appeared in British television broadcastings of theatre classics in the 1970s, one example being Laurence Olivier in The Collection (1976), as part of Laurence Olivier Presents. Richard Chandos, a student at the University of Los Angeles (1976), appeared in Aces High (1976), and as Dornford Yates' gentleman hero Richard Chandos in She Fell Among Thieves (1978) and the title role in Caligula (1979). In Time After Time (1979), he made his Hollywood debut as H. G. Wells. He has often played villains, later on his career as a film critic, but "I suppose I'm mainly known for that," he said about his film career: "I suppose I'm primarily known for that," he later remarking that it would only be half of my career if I were to finish it all up." Author Roger Lewis wrote about McDowell's later career in his biography Anthony Burgess: A Life: "His pretty-boy appearances faded and he was barred from playing villains in straight-to-video films that turn up on Channel 5".
McDowell appeared in the action film Blue Thunder (1983) as F.E. Cochrane, 1981, and the horror film Cat People (1982). Reggie Wanker, a parody of Mick Jagger, appeared in Get Crazy in 1983. McDowell appeared in "Little Red Riding Hood" as the Wolf (Reginald von Lupen) in Faerie Tale Theatre's interpretation of "Little Red Riding Hood" (his wife at the time, Mary Steenburgen, appeared in Little Red Riding Hood). He narrated The Compleat Beatles in 1984. He is best described as "the man who killed Captain Kirk" in the film Star Trek Generations (1994), in which he played the eccentric scientist Dr. Tolian Soran, and several overzealous Star Trek followers even issued death threats for this. McDowell appeared in a number of computer games, most notable as Admiral Geoffrey Tolwyn in the Wing Commander series of computer games. His role in Wing Commander III marked the change from 2D pre-rendered cutscenes to live action cutscenes. His appearance in Wing Commander IV was during the final days of video game live action cutscenes.
He co-starred with actress and singer Lori Petty in the science fiction/action comedy film Tank Girl in 1995. Dr. Kesslee, the evil head of the global Water and Power Company whose main aim in the story was to monitor the planet's entire water supply on a future desert-like, post-apocalyptic Earth, was shown here.
McDowell appeared in a 2000 episode of the animated film South Park, which was a comedic adaptation of Charles Dickens' book Great Expectations. In the episode, McDowell portrayed himself as "a British guy" and its ex-host Alistair Cooke.
McDowell chastised protagonist Griffin Mill (Tim Robbins) for badmouthing him behind his back. "Mr...." began working with Altman for The Company once more in 2003. A. "The fictional director of the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago," the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago's fictional director. Gerald Arpino, a real-life director, based his character. In the British crime film Gangster No. 1, McDowell played a brief but memorable role as the psychopathic Gangster. 1 (2000). He portrayed a young drug dealer in the film I'll Sleep When I'm Dead (2003), a straight married man who rapes a teenage drug dealer to "teach him a lesson." Clive Owen appeared in the film as the victim's elder brother.
McDowell portrayed radio mogul Jonas Slaughter on Law & Order: Criminal Intent in 2006. On the first season of NBC's Heroes, he played the villainous Mr. Linderman, a role he reprised in the third season. Jerry Was a Man appeared on Sky's Master of Science Fiction was an episode of Master of Science Fiction. In the Monk season 4 episode, "Mr. Monk Goes to a Fashion Show," he portrayed Terrence McQuewick on Entourage, and he made a Special Guest Appearance as the icy fashion designer Julian Hodge. Never Apologize is Malcolm McDowell's one-man film about his time with film producer Lindsay Anderson in 2007.
In Rob Zombie's remakes of Halloween and Halloween II (in 2007 and 2009, respectively), McDowell appeared as Dr. Samuel Loomis. Despite the fact that the films were not well-received critically, they did a good job at the box office, and McDowell was praised for his performances and for being perfectly cast. He appeared in The List of Robert Whitlow (2006) and Enda Doyle in Red Roses and Petrol (2003). Rob Stefaniuk, actor/director Rob Stefaniuk, and the forthcoming Alex Wright film Two Wolves are his next films. He appeared in the heavy metal band Slipknot's "Snuff" music video in December 2009. In the film The Book of Eli (2010), he appears uncredited as the curator Lombardi. In the Christian comedy thriller film Suing the Devil (2011), McDowell played Satan.
McDowell appeared in the Academy Award-winning film The Artist in 2011 and was cast in Stanton Infeld on the TNT original series Franklin & Bash. McDowell appeared in the horror films Vamps and Silent Hill: Revelation in 2012. He was on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on March 16, 2012, a few steps outside the Pig n' Whistle British pub on Hollywood Boulevard. Gary Oldman, a fellow British actor, was in attendance and said thank you to McDowell for assisting him in becoming an actor.
He appeared as the title character in the psychological thriller The Employer, for which he was named Best Actor at the Los Angeles Movie Awards in 2013. McDowell delved into Steampunk in 2013, co-starring Richard Hatch and Walter Koenig in the short film Cowboys & Engines. In the film Richard the Lionheart, he appeared as King Henry II of England, with Gregory Chandler as the title character. In the 2016 Rob Zombie film 31, he played Father Murder. In Abnormal Attraction (2018) co-starring Gilbert Gottfried, Bruce Davison, Tyler Mane, and Leslie Easterbrook, McDowell appeared as Boogeyman.
In the documentary The Compleat Beatles, McDowell was the featured narrator. In Happily Ever After (1993), Zarm in the cartoon Masterplan and the Planeteers, the Superman villain Metallo in the movie Superman, Mad Mod on Teen Titans, Merlyn's Showcase: Green Arrow (2010), Arkady Duvall's son, the voice of a Death Star commander parodying Star Wars. He appears on the second season of the Adult Swim cartoon Metalocalypse as Vater Orlaag and other characters. In Disney's Bolt (2008) and Reeses II, a show laced with hints to many films, including his own appearance in A Clockwork Orange, McDowell also starred Dr. Calico in Disney's Bolt (2008) and Reeses II.
He appeared on two Pink Floyd tribute albums, Back Against the Wall and Return to the Dark Side of the Moon, from Billy Sherwood's 2006-07 appearance. On his album #NEWGOREORDER (2014), he has also done voice-over work for Borgore. McDowell played Grandpa Fletcher on Phineas and Ferb in 2008 and 1983. He also narrated the award-winning documentary Blue Gold: The World War II.
McDowell recalled his role as Metallo in the video game Superman: Shadow of Apokolips and an episode of Justice League Unlimited. In addition, he spoke for President John Henry Eden in the video game Fallout 3, Rupert Pelham in the Word of Promise Audio Bible, and Stahl Arms CEO Jorhan Stahl in Killzone 3. In God of War III, he also spoke Daedalus. In the MMO The Elder Scrolls Online, he is the voice of the main antagonist Molag Bal. In Call of Duty: Black Ops III, he is also the voice of Dr. Monty.
In The Truth & Life Dramatized audiobook, McDowell portrayed Caiaphas, a 22-hour-voiced, fully dramatized audio New Testament that uses the RSV-CE translation.
McDowell is the host of Fangoria's Dreadtime Stories, a monthly collection of radio dramas with a mystery, horror, science fiction, and dark humour theme. Every month, a new episode is available for download, and scripts, as used by McDowell and the supporting cast members, are also available at the Fangoria website.
In 2020, he interpreted Gabriele Tinti's poetry inspired by epigraphs found in the National Roman Museum.